Provided by: libperlbal-perl_1.80-3_all bug

NAME

       Perlbal::Manual::ReverseProxy - Configuring Perlbal as a Reverse Proxy

   VERSION
       Perlbal 1.78.

   DESCRIPTION
       How to configure a Perlbal Reverse Proxy service.

   READ ME FIRST
       Please read Perlbal::Manual::Configuration first for a better explanation on how to configure Perlbal.
       This document will make much more sense after reading that.

   Configuring Perlbal as a Reverse Proxy
       Configuration of Perlbal as a Reverse Proxy is similar to configuration as a Load Balancer.

       Check Perlbal::Manual::LoadBalancer under "Using Perlbal as a Load Balancer" for a sample configuration
       file and for a brief explanation of the differences between a Load Balancer and a Reverse Proxy.

   Parameters
       You can set parameters via commands of either forms:

           SET <service-name> <param> = <value>
           SET <param> = <value>

       always_trusted = bool
               Whether to trust all incoming requests' X-Forwarded-For and related headers. Set to true only if
               you know that all incoming requests from your own proxy servers that clean/set those headers.

               Default is false.

       backend_persist_cache = int
               The number of backend connections to keep alive on reserve while there are no clients.

               Default is 2.

       blind_proxy = bool
               Flag to disable any modification of X-Forwarded-For, X-Host, and X-Forwarded-Host headers.

               Default is false.

       buffer_backend_connect = size
               How much content-body (POST/PUT/etc) data we read from a client before we start sending it to a
               backend web node. If "buffer_uploads" is enabled, this value is used to determine how many bytes
               are read before Perlbal makes a determination on whether or not to spool the upload to disk.

               Default is 100k.

       buffer_size = size
               How much ahead of a client we'll get while copying from a backend to a client. If a client gets
               behind this much, we stop reading from the backend for a bit. Once all remaining data fits in the
               buffer, the backend is released and may be reused.

               Default is 256k.

       buffer_size_reproxy_url = size
               How much ahead of a client we'll get while copying from a reproxied URL to a client. If a client
               gets behind this much, we stop reading from the reproxied URL for a bit. The default is lower
               than the regular "buffer_size" (50k instead of 256k) because it's assumed that you're only
               reproxying to large files on event-based webservers, which are less sensitive to many open
               connections, whereas the 256k buffer size is good for keeping heavy process-based free of slow
               clients.

               Default if 50k.

       buffer_upload_threshold_rate = int
               If an upload is coming in at a rate less than this value in bytes per second, it will be buffered
               to disk. A value of 0 means the rate will not be checked.

               Default is 0.

       buffer_upload_threshold_size = size
               If an upload is larger than this size in bytes, it will be buffered to disk. A value of 0 means
               the size will not be checked.

               Default is 250k.

       buffer_upload_threshold_time = int
               If an upload is estimated to take more than this number of seconds, it will be buffered to disk.
               A value of 0 means the time will not be estimated.

               Default is 5.

       buffer_uploads = bool
               Used to enable or disable the buffer uploads to disk system. If enabled, "buffer_backend_connect"
               bytes worth of the upload will be stored in memory. At that point, the buffer upload thresholds
               will be checked to see if we should just send this upload to the backend or if we should spool it
               to the disk.

               Default if false.

       buffer_uploads_path = path/to/directory
               Directory root for storing files used to buffer uploads.

       client_sndbuf_size = size
               How large to set the client's socket SNDBUF.

               Default is 0.

       connect_ahead = int
               How many extra backend connections we keep alive in addition to the current ones, in anticipation
               of new client connections.

               Default is 0.

       enable_error_retries = bool
               Whether Perlbal should transparently retry requests to backends if a backend returns a 500 server
               error.

               Default is false.

       enable_reproxy = bool
               Enable 'reproxying' (end-user-transparent internal redirects) to either local files or other
               URLs. When enabled, the backend servers in the pool that this service is configured for will have
               access to tell this Perlbal instance to serve any local readable file, or connect to any other
               URL that this Perlbal can connect to. Only enable this if you trust the backend web nodes.

               Default is false.

               See the section "Reproxying" in this document for more information.

       error_retry_schedule = string of comma-separated seconds (full or partial)
               String of comma-separated seconds (full or partial) to delay between retries. For example "0,2"
               would mean do at most two retries, the first zero seconds after the first failure, and the second
               2 seconds after the second failure. You probably don't need to modify the default value.

               Default it 0,0.25,0.50,1,1,1,1,1

       enable_ssl = bool
               Enable SSL to the client.

               Default is false.

       high_priority_cookie = cookie_name
               The cookie name to inspect to determine if the client goes onto the high-priority queue.

               See Perlbal::Manual::HighPriority for more information.

       high_priority_cookie_contents = string
               A string that the "high_priority_cookie" must contain to go onto the high-priority queue.

               See Perlbal::Manual::HighPriority for more information.

       idle_timeout = int
               Timeout in seconds for idle connections to the end user. It's also the limit for how long a
               backend may take to respond or transfer data.

               Default is 30.

       listen = ip:port
               The ip:port to listen on. For a service to work, you must either make it listen, or make another
               selector service map to a non-listening service.

       max_backend_uses = int
               The maximum number of requests to be made on a single persistent backend connection before
               releasing the connection.

               A value of 0 means there is no limit and the connection will only be discarded once the backend
               asks it to be or when Perlbal is sufficiently idle.

               Default is 0.

       max_chunked_request_size = size
               The maximum size that will be accepted for a chunked request (which is written to disk, buffered
               uploads must be on). A value of 0 means no limit.

               Default is 209715200 (200MB).

       persist_client = bool
               Whether to enable HTTP keep-alives to the end user.

               Default is false.

       persist_backend = bool
               Whether to enable HTTP keep-alives to the backend webnodes.

               Default is false, but setting it to true is highly recommended if Perlbal is the only client to
               your backends. If not, beware that Perlbal will hog the connections, starving other clients.

       persist_client_idle_timeout = int
               Timeout in seconds for HTTP persist_client_idle_timeout keep-alives to the end user.

               Default is 30.

       persist_client_timeout = int (DEPRECATED)
               Set both the persist_client_timeout persist_client_idle_timeout and idle_timeout.

               Deprecated.

       pool    Name of previously-created pool object containing the backend nodes that this reverse proxy sends
               requests to.

       queue_relief_chance = int:0-100
               Chance (percentage) to take a standard priority request when we're in pressure relief mode.

               Default is 0.

               See Perlbal::Manual::HighPriority for more information.

       queue_relief_size = int
               Number of outstanding standard priority connections to activate pressure relief at.

               A value of 0 disables the high priority queue system entirely.

               Default is 0.

               See Perlbal::Manual::HighPriority for more information.

       reproxy_cache_maxsize = int
               Set the maximum number of cached reproxy results (X-REPROXY-CACHE-FOR) that may be kept in the
               service cache. These cached requests take up about 1.25KB of RAM each (on Linux x86), but will
               vary with usage. Perlbal still starts with 0 in the cache and will grow over time. Be careful
               when adjusting this and watch your RAM usage like a hawk.

               Default is 0, which means cache is disabled.

       role = reverse_proxy|web_server|management|selector
               What type of service. One of 'reverse_proxy' for a service that load balances to a pool of
               backend webserver nodes, 'web_server' for a typical webserver', 'management' for a Perlbal
               management interface (speaks both command-line or HTTP, auto-detected), or 'selector', for a
               virtual service that maps onto other services.

       server_process
               Executable which will be the HTTP server on stdin/stdout. (ALPHA, EXPERIMENTAL)

       ssl_cert_file = path/to/file
               Path to certificate PEM file for SSL.

               Default is "certs/server-cert.pem".

       ssl_cipher_list = cipher list
               OpenSSL-style cipher list.

               Default is "ALL:!LOW:!EXP".

       ssl_key_file = path/to/file
               Path to private key PEM file for SSL.

               Default is "certs/server-key.pem".

       trusted_upstream_proxies = Net::Netmask filter
               A comma separated list of Net::Netmask filters (e.g. 10.0.0.0/24, see Net::Netmask) that
               determines whether upstream clients are trusted or not, where trusted means their
               X-Forwarded-For/etc headers are not munged.

       upload_status_listeners = comma separated list of hosts
               Comma separated list of hosts in form 'a.b.c.d:port' which will receive UDP upload status packets
               no faster than once a second per HTTP request (PUT/POST) from clients that have requested an
               upload status bar, which they request by appending the URL get argument ?client_up_sess=[xxxxx]
               where xxxxx is 5-50 'word' characters (a-z, A-Z, 0-9, underscore).

       verify_backend = bool
               Whether Perlbal should send a quick OPTIONS request to the backends before sending an actual
               client request to them. If your backend is Apache or some other process-based webserver, this is
               highly recommended. All too often a loaded backend box will reply to new TCP connections, but
               it's the kernel's TCP stack Perlbal is talking to, not and actual Apache process yet. Using this
               option reduces end-user latency a ton on loaded sites.

               Default if false.

       verify_backend_path = path
               What path the OPTIONS request sent by "verify_backend" should use.

               Default is "*".

       server_tokens = bool
               Whether to provide a "Server" header.

               Perlbal by default adds a header to all replies (such as the web_server role). By setting this
               default to "off", you can prevent Perlbal from identifying itself.

               Default is "on".

   More on Parameters
       backend_persist_cache vs. connect_ahead

       The "backend_persist_cache" parameter refers to connections kept alive after being used, while
       "connect_ahead" refers to connections opened in anticipation.

       For instance:

           SET backend_persist_cache = 2
           SET connect_ahead         = 1

       Let's assume, for simplification purposes, that your service only has one server. Here's an example of
       what could happen:

       •   Perlbal starts

           No connections open until the very first request comes in (this may change in the future).

       •   one requests arrives

           This request starts being served on the open connection; Perlbal opens another connection because
           "connect_ahead"'s value tells it to always open one in anticipation.

       •   a second request arrives

           (the first request hasn't concluded yet)

           The second connection is used, a third one is created so we still have one in anticipation.

       •   the first request finishes

           The connection is kept open; this means we now have three open connections: two being used and one
           free (the first and the third one are free).

       •   the second request finishes

           The connection is killed, as we already have two other open connections (the first and the third),
           and that's the number set by "backend_persist_cache" for the number of connections to be kept alive.

       Reproxying

       Perlbal supports the concept of reproxying. Basically, this gives it the ability to ask a backend node
       for a file and get back a specific header that says "this file is really over there, get it there."
       Perlbal will then load that file or URL and send it to the user transparently, without them ever knowing
       that they got reproxied to another location.

       Add the following line to your perlbal.conf to enable reproxying on a per service basis ( reproxying is
       disabled by default in >= 1.38 ):

           SET enable_reproxy  = true

       This can be useful for having URLs that get mapped to files on disk without giving users enough
       information to map out your directory structure. For example, you can create a file structure such as:

           /home/pics/$userid/$pic

       Then you can have URLs such as:

           http://foo.com/mysite/users/$userid/picture/$pic

       When this URL gets passed to the backend web node, it could return a simple response that includes this
       header:

           X-REPROXY-FILE: /home/pics/$userid/$pic

       Perlbal will then use asynchronous IO to send the file to the user without slowing down Perlbal at all.

       This support also extends to URLs that can be located anywhere Perlbal has access to. It's the same
       syntax, nearly:

           X-REPROXY-URL: http://foo.com:80/resource.html

       You can also specify multiple URLs:

           X-REPROXY-URL: http://foo.com:80/resource.html http://baz.com:8080/res.htm

       Just specify any number of space separated URLs. Perlbal will request them one by one until one returns a
       response code of 200. At that point Perlbal will proxy the response back to the user just like normal.

       Note that the user's headers are NOT passed through to the web server. To the target server, it looks
       simply like Perlbal is requesting the resource for itself. This behavior may change at some point.

       One final note: the server that returns the reproxy header can also return a "X-REPROXY-EXPECTED-SIZE"
       header. If present, Perlbal will consider a reproxy a failure if the file returned by the target system
       is of a different size than what the expected size header says. On failure, Perlbal tries the next URI in
       the list. If it's a file being reproxied, a 404 is returned if the file size is different.

   SEE ALSO
       Perlbal::Manual::Configuration, Perlbal::Manual::FailOver, Perlbal::Manual::LoadBalancer,
       Perlbal::Manual::Management.